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Journal ArticleDOI

Biology and monitoring of Dryocosmus kuriphilus on Castanea sativa in Southern Italy

TLDR
Yellow traps were shown to be an effective method for assessing the emergence of cynipid adults and could potentially be used to time chemical applications in those cases in which this control method is feasible.
Abstract
1 The cynipid gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) is an invasive wasp in Europe and is one of the major pests of chestnuts worldwide. An investigation of this cynipid was started in Campania, Southern Italy, in 2008, with the aim of providing guidelines for its sustainable control. 2 The number of larvae/gall increased in the second year of colonization relative to the first one but thereafter decreased in the third year of colonization, whereas the volume of the galls after the initial increase in the second year of colonization became stable. Adult emergence generally peaked between the middle of June and July. 3 The only reliable method for assessing the presence of the pest at its earliest stage was through dissecting the buds because oviposition scars on the buds tended to disappear during the winter. 4 Yellow traps were shown to be an effective method for assessing the emergence of cynipid adults and could potentially be used to time chemical applications in those cases in which this control method is feasible. 5 No correlation was recorded between the relative durations of the final stages (pupae, pharate adults and emergence). 6 Possible control strategies for this invasive pest are discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Invasion by the chestnut gall wasp in Italy causes significant yield loss in Castanea sativa nut production

TL;DR: The nut yield of C. sativa chestnut trees was negatively related to the gall wasp infestation level, with losses as high as 80% being reported when the number of current‐year galls was above six galls per 50‐cm twig.
Journal Article

Native parasitoids associated with Dryocosmus kuriphilus in Tuscany, Italy

TL;DR: A higher overall parasitism rate was found on wild chestnut galls (with respect to cultivated ones) and where oak trees were more abundant and where the exotic parasitoid Torymus sinensis Kamijo was more abundant.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Asian chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus: a global invader and a successful case of classical biological control

TL;DR: The history of introduction, spread, and current distribution of the Asian chestnut gall wasp is summarized, one of the most successful cases of classical biological control against a forest pest is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing the impact of Dryocosmus kuriphilus on the chestnut tree: branch architecture matters

TL;DR: The proposed composite damage index enables a more realistic assessment of the entire epidemic process, including the recovery phase when the gall wasp is biologically controlled, and highlights how traditional methods of assessing the degree of infestation fail to give sound estimations of resulting damage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural occurrence of Fusarium proliferatum on chestnut in Italy and its potential entomopathogenicity against the Asian chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus

TL;DR: The efficacy in controlling DK in the galls, the absence of pathogenicity to chestnut, and the lower mycotoxin production indicated strain I3 as a promising biocontrol agent of the considered pest.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Application of Systematic Review Methodology to Food and Feed Safety Assessments to Support Decision Making

TL;DR: This Guidance aims to assist the application of systematic reviews to food and feed safety risk assessments in support of decision making, by describing a framework for identifying the different types of question suitable for systematic review generated by the risk assessment process.
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The Population Biology of Oak Gall Wasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae)

TL;DR: This work assesses the importance of gall traits in structuring oak cynipid communities and summarize the evidence for bottom-up and top-down effects across trophic levels, and identifies major unanswered questions and suggest approaches for the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

The diversity and phylogeography of cynipid gallwasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) of the Oriental and eastern Palearctic regions, and their associated communities

TL;DR: This work summarizes what is known for all gallwasp tribes in the region extending from Pakistan to Japan and south to Indonesia, and highlights contributions that work in this region has made to understand the biology of this group as a whole.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host niches and defensive extended phenotypes structure parasitoid wasp communities

TL;DR: The impact of host traits and phylogenetic relatedness on 48 ecologically closed and species-rich communities of parasitoids attacking gall-inducing wasps on oaks is examined and the “Enemy Hypothesis” is tested, which predicts that galls with similar morphology will exclude similar sets of Parasitoids and therefore have similar parasitoid communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rearing, release and settlement prospect in Italy of Torymus sinensis , the biological control agent of the chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus

TL;DR: There are encouraging data about the settlement of the parasitoid and its synchrony with the host’s cycle: from about 64,000 host galls collected in the field over 200 T. sinensis were reared and the role of native parasitoids associated with the chestnut gall pest in its Italian distribution range is also discussed.
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